Catecholaminergic Polymorphic Ventricular Tachycardia |Diagnosis & Treatments
How is CPVT diagnosed?
任何小孩或年轻人儿茶酚的症状aminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT) during periods of exertion or strong emotion should be evaluated by an experienced team.
Because CPVT is only observable during periods of adrenaline, standard electrocardiograms and echocardiograms are not good diagnostic tests. Instead, if CPVT is suspected, your child will have anexercise stress test. This test utilizes a treadmill or bicycle and records the heart’s function during exercise. Younger patients too small for the treadmill may use aHolter monitor.
An exercise stress test can reveal a pattern of extra beats from the ventricles (ventricular ectopy), which become increasingly frequent and more complex as adrenaline release increases. These extra beats often develop into complex arrhythmias called “bidirectional” or “polymorphic ventricular tachycardia.”
Genetic testingis also an important part of the overall diagnostic work up for CPVT. This requires expert interpretation, often within the context of a whole-family evaluation.
What are the treatment options for CPVT?
There are several treatments for CPVT. Your child’s exact course of treatment will be based on the rate or severity of his or her arrhythmia.
Medications for CPVT
Many forms can be treated with medication, including beta blockers and antiarrhythmics. Beta blockers work by blocking beta-receptors and preventing adrenaline from affecting the heart. This helps slow the heart rate.
A common antiarrhythmic medication used for CPVT is flecainide, which works by affecting the sodium and calcium exchange within the cardiac cell. While very effective in some people with CPVT, it does not work for everyone.
Implantable cardioverter defibrillators
Implantable cardioverter defibrillators are devices often used in patients considered high risk, or those who continue to have symptoms after other treatment. They can detect ventricular arrhythmias and treat them by giving a precise electrical pulse to restore normal cardiac rhythm.
Left cardiac sympathetic denervation
When medical treatments don’t work to stop arrhythmias, your child’s doctor may recommend a day surgical procedure called left cardiac sympathetic denervation (sympathectomy). In this procedure, a surgeon divides the nerves going into the heart. This can prevent adrenaline from stimulating the heart and causing arrhythmias.